One of the main things a company needs to keep a close eye on to stay afloat is different numbers and metrics.
One such metric is the cost of goods sold, which represents how much money a business will need to spend to produce its goods. Calculating and accurately planning your expenses related to production costs will save you a lot of headaches in the future — and money, of course.
Find out the formula for the cost of goods sold and a step-by-step calculation guide.
What is the cost of goods sold (COGS)?
The cost of goods sold is a metric used to display the direct cost of producing goods a business sells. It shows the true cost of a product a business intends to sell and has invested money in.
Remembering the word “inventory” in the context of the cost of goods sold is also important. Let’s turn to its definition in the International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) – globally recognized accounting principles designed to standardize financial reporting practices across countries (required or permitted to use in over 140 countries, including the EU). According to IFRS, inventories are assets:
held for sale in the ordinary course of business;
in the process of production for such sale;
in the form of materials or supplies consumed in the production process or the rendering of services.
Inventory can refer to a company’s merchandise or the materials used to create it.
To better understand what is the cost of goods sold, let’s list the direct costs in consists of:
Raw materials that were directly used to create a product (a car manufacturer buys steel to use for car production);
Wages paid to employees who were directly involved in creating a product (a car manufacturer pays mechanics to install engines).
Note that the cost of goods sold includes indirect costs, such as manufacturing overhead costs. Also known as production overheads or factory overheads, these are costs that can’t be traced to specific production units but are still required to manufacture a product. For instance, if a company purchases equipment to help produce their product, it is considered an overhead. Some fixed costs, such as factory rent, can even be considered overheads.
At the same time, COGS excludes indirect expenses related to advertising, sales commissions, marketing campaigns, promotional activities, distribution costs, and administrative expenses.
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The cost of goods sold formula
The cost of goods sold formula is fairly straightforward: COGS = beginning inventory + purchases during the period (P) − ending inventory.
What does it all mean? Let’s review the formula for cost of goods sold in more detail:
Beginning inventory. It is the cost of all goods a company has at the beginning of the calculation period. These are both goods held for sale or in the process of production.
Purchases during the period (P). This figure represents the cost the business will spend on buying raw materials and producing goods during the period.
Ending inventory. It is the cost of products and inventory that weren’t sold or used during the period.
Here’s a simple example with figures for one month:
Beginning inventory (€17,300) + purchases during the period (€52,110) – ending inventory (€ 7,960) = cost of goods sold formula (€61,450).
Step-by-step instructions to calculate COGS
Let’s use a startup online clothes store as an example for calculating the formula for cost of goods sold.
1. Determine beginning inventory
A small e-store wants to calculate the cost of goods sold for the month. It all starts with finding out the beginning inventory costs, i.e., the cost of goods the store didn’t sell last month.
This inventory value will consist of different clothing items for the clothes store. For example, the inventory remaining is 120 units of dresses, 64 units of shirts, 72 units of trousers, etc., totaling €34,000.
Note: The inventory you started with is the same as the end inventory value from the previous month, which you can find on the company’s balance sheet.
2. Add purchases during the period
These costs will include all the inventory purchased during the month that is required to produce clothes.
Let’s say the direct cost of direct raw materials (fabrics, zippers, buttons, labels, etc.) bought by the company is €9,540. Additionally, the e-store paid €2,000 for shipping.
Remember to include direct labor — the wages of employees directly involved in producing the merchandise. In this case, the direct labor is the company’s designer, who comes up with garment concepts. The direct costs related to the designer’s wages are €3,000.
Plus, manufacturing overhead costs: the store needed to pay the factory’s rent (€1,500) and repair one of the sewing machines (€700).
The costs incurred amounted to